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Cryptography and Network Security Chapter 20 Firewalls

Cryptography and Network Security Chapter 20 Firewalls. Fourth Edition by William Stallings Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown extended and adopted by Hans Hedbom. Chapter 20 – Firewalls. The function of a strong position is to make the forces holding it practically unassailable

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Cryptography and Network Security Chapter 20 Firewalls

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  1. Cryptography and Network SecurityChapter 20 Firewalls Fourth Edition by William Stallings Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown extended and adopted by Hans Hedbom

  2. Chapter 20 – Firewalls The function of a strong position is to make the forces holding it practically unassailable —On War, Carl Von Clausewitz

  3. Introduction • seen evolution of information systems • now everyone want to be on the Internet • and to interconnect networks • has persistent security concerns • can’t easily secure every system in org • typically use a Firewall • to provide perimeter defence • as part of comprehensive security strategy

  4. What is a Firewall? • a choke point of control and monitoring • interconnects networks with differing trust • imposes restrictions on network services • only authorized traffic is allowed • auditing and controlling access • can implement alarms for abnormal behavior • provide NAT & usage monitoring • implement VPNs using IPSec • must be immune to penetration

  5. Firewall Limitations • cannot protect from attacks bypassing it • eg sneaker net, utility modems, trusted organisations, trusted services (eg SSL/SSH) • cannot protect against internal threats • eg disgruntled or colluding employees • cannot protect against transfer of all virus infected programs or files • because of huge range of O/S & file types

  6. Firewalls – Packet Filters • simplest, fastest firewall component • foundation of any firewall system • examine each IP packet (no context) and permit or deny according to rules • hence restrict access to services (ports) • possible default policies • that not expressly permitted is prohibited • that not expressly prohibited is permitted

  7. Firewalls – Packet Filters

  8. Screeing policy actions • Forward • The package is forwarded to the intended recipient • Drop • The packages is dropped (without notification) • Reject • The package is rejected (with notification) • Log • The packages appearance is logged (to be combined) • Alarm • The packages appearance triggers an alarm (to be combined) 8

  9. Screening policies • There should always be some default rules • The last rule should be „Drop everything from everyone“ which enforce a defensive strategy • Network monitoring and control messages should be considered 9

  10. Firewalls – Packet Filters

  11. Attacks on Packet Filters • IP address spoofing • fake source address to be trusted • add filters on router to block • source routing attacks • attacker sets a route other than default • block source routed packets • tiny fragment attacks • split header info over several tiny packets • either discard or reassemble before check

  12. Firewalls – Stateful Packet Filters • traditional packet filters do not examine higher layer context • ie matching return packets with outgoing flow • stateful packet filters address this need • they examine each IP packet in context • keep track of client-server sessions • check each packet validly belongs to one • hence are better able to detect bogus packets out of context

  13. One screening router can protect a whole network Packet filtering is extremely efficient Packet filtering is widely available Current filtering tools are not perfect Some policies are difficult to enforce Packet filtering generates extra load for the router Advantage/Disadvantage + - 13

  14. Firewalls - Application Level Gateway (or Proxy) • have application specific gateway / proxy • has full access to protocol • user requests service from proxy • proxy validates request as legal • then actions request and returns result to user • can log / audit traffic at application level • need separate proxies for each service • some services naturally support proxying • others are more problematic

  15. Different modes • Proxy-aware application software • The application software knows how to connect to the proxy and forward the final destination • Proxy-aware operating system software • The operating system checks and eventually modify the IP addresses to use the proxy • Proxy-aware user procedures • The user has to follow some procedures. He tells the client software where to connect and also the proxy the destination address • Proxy-aware router • The client attempts to make connections as usual and the router intercepts and redirects packages to the proxy 15

  16. Firewalls - Application Level Gateway (or Proxy)

  17. Firewalls - Circuit Level Gateway • relays two TCP connections • imposes security by limiting which such connections are allowed • once created usually relays traffic without examining contents • typically used when trust internal users by allowing general outbound connections • SOCKS is commonly used

  18. Firewalls - Circuit Level Gateway

  19. Proxies can do intelligent filtering Proxies can provide logging and caching Proxies can provide user-level authentication Proxies cause a delay Proxies can require modifications to clients Proxies may require a different server for each service Advantage/Disadvantage + - 19

  20. Network Adress Transalation • NAT allows to use a set of network addresses internally and a different set externally • Do not generate security itself but force connection over one point 20

  21. Modes • Static allocation • The translation scheme is static • Dynamic allocation of addresses • The connection addresses are determined on a per session base • Dynamic allocation of addresses and ports • Both addresses and ports are dynamic 21

  22. NAT helps to enforce the firewalls control over outbound traffic NAT helps to restrict incoming traffic NAT hides the internal network configuration Embedded IP can become a problem Dynamic allocation may interfere with encryption and authentication Dynamic allocation of port may interfere with package filters Advantage/Disadvantage + - 22

  23. Bastion Host • highly secure host system • runs circuit / application level gateways • or provides externally accessible services • potentially exposed to "hostile" elements • hence is secured to withstand this • hardened O/S, essential services, extra auth • proxies small, secure, independent, non-privileged • may support 2 or more net connections • may be trusted to enforce policy of trusted separation between these net connections

  24. Firewall Configurations

  25. Firewall Configurations

  26. Firewall Configurations

  27. Mulitple Screened Subnets • Split-Screened subnet • Multiple networks between the exterior and interior router. The networks are usually connected by dual-homed hosts. • Independent Screened Subnets • n Screened Subnets 27

  28. Hybrid - Example Structure Internet Supplier Net DMZ DMZ DMZ Application DMZ DMZ Database Back End Employee Lan DMZ 28

  29. Evaluating a Firewall • Scalability • Reliability and Redundancy • Auditability • Price (Hardware, Software, Setup, Maintenance) • Management and Configuration 29

  30. Firewalls and Malware • Should preferably control both ingoingand outgoing traffic • Windows XP firewall controls only ingoing traffic • Trojans can start up servers on the inside • Firewall should preferable inspect packets on the application layer • Network layer based packet filters do not provide adequate protection 30

  31. Firewalls and Malware • New worms/viruses often tries to kill firewall and anti virus processes • “Tunneled Worms” • Tunnel IP packet within other IP packet to hide real IP header • Tunneling program can be built in in Trojans Tunneled IP packet 31

  32. IP- Tables • IP Tables is the standard kernel firewall system for Linux since Kernel 2.4.x • Packet Filtering and NAT for linux 32

  33. Rule iptables [-t table] command [match] [traget/jump] • -t table • Nat (PREROUTING, POSTROUTING) • Mangle (PREROUTING, POSTROUTING) • Filter (default) (FORWARD, INPUT, OUTPUT) 33

  34. Rule iptables [-t table] command [match] [traget/jump] • Command • -P, --policy • -A, --append • -D, --delete • -R, --replace • -L, --list • ... 34

  35. Rule iptables [-t table] command [match] [traget/jump] • Match (generic) • -p, --protocoll (TCP, UDP, ICMP) • -s, --source (IP Adresse/port) • -d, --destination (IP Adresse/port) • -i, --in-interface (eth0, eth1, ppp1) • -o, --out-interface (eth0, eth1, ppp1) • -m, --match (special commands) 35

  36. Rule iptables [-t table] command [match] [traget/jump] • Target/jump • -j ACCEPT • -j DROP • -j LOG • -j MAQUERADE • ... 36

  37. Example Rules • iptable –P FORWARD DROP • Introduce the general policy to drop all packages • Iptable –t nat –P PREROUTING ACCEPT • Accept prerouting nat traffic • iptable –A FORWARD -i eth1 –p TCP–d 193.10.221.184 -–dport 80 –j ACCEPT • Accept all tcp connections to port 80 coming in at my second network interface to my ip • iptables –A FORWARD –m limit –-limit 3/minutes –j LOG • Log all refused connections but max. 3 per minute 37

  38. Additional Literature • Building Internet FirewallsZwicky, CooperISBN 1565928717; O‘Reilly • iptables Tutorial 1.1.16Oskar Andreassonhttp://iptables-tutorial.frozentux.net/iptables-tutorial.html 38

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